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Will Oil Rebound From Lows?

By:
Vladimir Zernov
Published: Aug 6, 2024, 19:32 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Oil markets have been under strong pressure due to problems of China's economy and worries about the slowdown of the U.S. economy.
  • The recent pullback was mostly driven by general market sentiment rather than fundamentals.
  • Saudi Arabia has just raised prices for its Asian customers, suggesting that demand for physical oil remained strong.
WTI Oil

In this article:

The recent weeks have been tough for oil bulls. WTI oil, which traded near the $84.00 level at the beginning of July, dropped below $74.00. Market action was also disappointing for Brent oil bulls, which had to watch prices drop from $88.00 to the current $76.00 level.

Initially, the pullback was triggered by disappointing economic data from China. The country’s economy is not growing as fast as markets have previously expected, so traders fear that its demand for oil would be weaker than expected as well.

In recent days, attention turned to U.S. The job market data was weaker than expected, and everyone has started talking about slowdown of the U.S. economy. Ultimately, equity markets had to endure a rough pullback, although it was mostly driven by high valuations of tech stocks rather than serious economic problems. Not surprisingly, the strong sell-off in the equity markets had a negative impact on commodity markets.

It should be noted OPEC+ still plans to start increasing production in October. If markets stay where they are now, the group will likely change its mind, providing additional support to oil prices.

Meanwhile, Fed will start cutting rates in September. The only question is whether Fed starts with a 25 bps cut or goes full speed with a 50 bps cut. The second option could provide a major boost to oil markets ahead of winter.

At this point, it looks that the recent pullback in the oil markets was mostly driven by fears rather than fundamentals. In fact, Saudi Arabia has recently raised September crude prices for Asian customers, despite recession worries. Analysts would point out that the hike was smaller than expected, but any hike is a significant development at a time when the market is under strong pressure.

From the technical point of view, oil markets have pulled back towards the low end of their yearly range. To move lower, oil would need additional negative catalysts that have not been already priced in by the market. At this point, a rebound from current levels looks like a more probable scenario.

For a look at all of today’s economic events, check out our economic calendar.

About the Author

Vladimir is an independent trader and analyst with over 10 years of experience in the financial markets. He is a specialist in stocks, futures, Forex, indices, and commodities areas using long-term positional trading and swing trading.

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